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Jakarta EE Application Development

Jakarta EE Application Development - Second Edition

By : David R. Heffelfinger
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Jakarta EE Application Development

Jakarta EE Application Development

5 (2)
By: David R. Heffelfinger

Overview of this book

Jakarta EE stands as a robust standard with multiple implementations, presenting developers with a versatile toolkit for building enterprise applications. However, despite the advantages of enterprise application development, vendor lock-in remains a concern for many developers, limiting flexibility and interoperability across diverse environments. This Jakarta EE application development guide addresses the challenge of vendor lock-in by offering comprehensive coverage of the major Jakarta EE APIs and goes beyond the basics to help you develop applications deployable on any Jakarta EE compliant runtime. This book introduces you to JSON Processing and JSON Binding and shows you how the Model API and the Streaming API are used to process JSON data. You’ll then explore additional Jakarta EE APIs, such as WebSocket and Messaging, for loosely coupled, asynchronous communication and discover ways to secure applications with the Jakarta EE Security API. Finally, you'll learn about Jakarta RESTful web service development and techniques to develop cloud-ready microservices in Jakarta EE. By the end of this book, you'll have developed the skills to craft secure, scalable, and cloud-native microservices that solve modern enterprise challenges.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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15
Chapter 15: Putting it All Together

Asynchronous processing

Traditionally, servlets have created a single thread per request in Java web applications. After a request is processed, the thread is made available for other requests to use. This model works fairly well for traditional web applications, in which HTTP requests are relatively few and far between. However, most modern web applications take advantage of Ajax (short for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML), a technique that makes web applications behave much more responsively than traditional web applications.

Ajax has the side effect of generating a lot more HTTP requests than traditional web applications. If some of these threads block for a long time waiting, for a resource to be ready or doing anything that takes a long time to process, it is possible our application may suffer from thread starvation.

To alleviate the situation described in the previous paragraph, the Servlet 3.0 specification introduced asynchronous processing. Using this new capability...

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